BACKGROUND: Intestinal inflammation in inflammatory bowel diseases is driven by abnormal levels of proinflammatory cytokines, where tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α seems to be particularly important. Chronic inflammatory signaling in the colon increases the risk of colorectal cancer, so we sought to evaluate the role of TNF-α in a mouse model of this condition. METHODS: TNF mice were treated with azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium to induce inflammation and tumorigenesis. Etanercept was used to produce pharmacological ablation of TNF-α in wild-type mice. Subsequent activation of procarcinogenic transcription factor NF-κB and relevant proinflammatory cytokines of the TNF superfamily were measured through immunohistochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction methods. RESULTS: Results showed that the severity of colitis, as assessed by mortality, histological scoring, and cytokine expression levels, was similar or slightly higher in mice lacking TNF-α than in control mice. Activation levels of NF-κB were not influenced by the presence of TNF-α. We also observed upregulated expression of TNF family member TNF-β, TNF receptors 1 and 2 and a variety of other proinflammatory factors in colitis-associated tumors of TNF mice, compared with levels in tumors of control mice. Neither genetic ablation of TNF-α nor pharmacological inhibition of the TNF family using etanercept reduced tumor number. CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal a redundant role for TNF-α in a mouse model of colitis-associated tumorigenesis, indicating a high degree of redundancy in proinflammatory cytokine networks in this model.
BACKGROUND: Intestinal inflammation in inflammatory bowel diseases is driven by abnormal levels of proinflammatory cytokines, where tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α seems to be particularly important. Chronic inflammatory signaling in the colon increases the risk of colorectal cancer, so we sought to evaluate the role of TNF-α in a mouse model of this condition. METHODS:TNFmice were treated with azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium to induce inflammation and tumorigenesis. Etanercept was used to produce pharmacological ablation of TNF-α in wild-type mice. Subsequent activation of procarcinogenic transcription factor NF-κB and relevant proinflammatory cytokines of the TNF superfamily were measured through immunohistochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction methods. RESULTS: Results showed that the severity of colitis, as assessed by mortality, histological scoring, and cytokine expression levels, was similar or slightly higher in mice lacking TNF-α than in control mice. Activation levels of NF-κB were not influenced by the presence of TNF-α. We also observed upregulated expression of TNF family member TNF-β, TNF receptors 1 and 2 and a variety of other proinflammatory factors in colitis-associated tumors of TNFmice, compared with levels in tumors of control mice. Neither genetic ablation of TNF-α nor pharmacological inhibition of the TNF family using etanercept reduced tumor number. CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal a redundant role for TNF-α in a mouse model of colitis-associated tumorigenesis, indicating a high degree of redundancy in proinflammatory cytokine networks in this model.
Authors: Ashleigh R Poh; Christopher G Love; Frederick Masson; Adele Preaudet; Cary Tsui; Lachlan Whitehead; Simon Monard; Yelena Khakham; Lotta Burstroem; Guillaume Lessene; Oliver Sieber; Clifford Lowell; Tracy L Putoczki; Robert J J O'Donoghue; Matthias Ernst Journal: Cancer Cell Date: 2017-04-10 Impact factor: 31.743